“With LeBron, it was more like the little homie” – Kevin Garnett on why many players don’t view LeBron James the same as Michael Jordan originally appeared on Basketball Network.

It’s been said before, but coming from Kevin Garnett, it lands a little heavier.

Advertisement

This is a man who went to war for 21 seasons, left everything on the floor every night and never held back when it came to giving credit or talking trash.

So when Garnett draws a line between Michael Jordan and LeBron James, it’s less about stats or GOAT debate and more about legacy as seen from within the fraternity.

It’s about presence. It’s about how one man redefined the game and another reengineered how long one could stay great.

Jordan, the ultimate GOAT

In his prime, Jordan was more than just a revolutionary player. He was a force of nature.

Advertisement

Before James was crowned The Chosen One, Garnett, like nearly every teenager with a hoop dream in the ’90s, saw Jordan as the blueprint. Not just the player to beat, but the one who seemed untouchable.

“It’s a different level of respect,” Garnett said of how players categorize Jordan. “[…] he was my version of what basketball looked like. And with LeBron, it was more like the little homie. Here’s the little homie growing up and man, little homie is getting better than everybody.”

“God damn … I definitely talked some s— to him. I’ve definitely said some crazy s— to him. He’s definitely said some crazy s— back to me,” he added.

Advertisement

This was the truth of that era. Garnett came into the league in 1995, just as Jordan returned from baseball and reclaimed the league like he never left. The Chicago Bulls were the apex predators and Jordan was the engine. Garnett entered that world as a teenager straight out of high school, wide-eyed but unafraid and found himself playing against his childhood idol.

But James’ story took a different arc. Drafted in 2003, eight years after Garnett, he was never the mythic figure lurking in the distance; he was the new kid coming in, learning on the fly, growing under the spotlight. And Garnett, still very much in his prime in the mid-2000s, saw James differently. He wasn’t an untouchable figurehead, but as someone to test, to talk trash to, to try and shake.

To Garnett, Jordan was the summit, James was the climber and from his vantage point, the reverence for Jordan wasn’t just about talent, it was about timing, dominance and impact. Jordan’s era had fewer distractions, less noise and more mystery that made him the undisputed all-time great in the eyes of many.

Advertisement

Related: “I wonder how much that puts a target on someone’s life” – Kyrie Irving suggests NBA contracts shouldn’t be available to the public

The weight of legacy

Still, while Garnett places Jordan in a singular space of a status that is simply unattainable for most, he doesn’t shy away from giving James his flowers, particularly when it comes to longevity. That’s where Garnett, who played until 40, understands exactly what it takes to survive in the league for two decades, let alone remain the face of it.

Advertisement

“You’ve gotta have that in you to be able to have those shoulders to carry it,” the Hall of Famer said of James. “No man is perfect in this s— and there ain’t no telltale book on how to do this s—. He’s done a great f—ing job. I just felt like it was only right to give him that respect.”

Garnett battled with James in multiple playoff series, from the heated Boston Celtics–Cleveland Cavaliers rivalry to the Miami Heat–Celtics wars that defined the late 2000s and early 2010s. Garnett was never interested in befriending opponents, especially not those trying to dethrone him. But even in the fire, he saw the growth.

The Kid from Akron became the Iron Man of the NBA.

Advertisement

Jordan’s dominance may have felt absolute, but it lived in an age of limited access and one-dimensional coverage.

James has existed in 24/7 news cycles, constant social media surveillance and shifting expectations. And yet, over two decades in, he’s still putting up numbers and rewriting what it means to be elite at 40-going-on-41.

Garnett, who played against both, seems to understand that perhaps greatness isn’t one thing; it morphs depending on the generation.

Advertisement

Related: “Better is only about championships” – Phil Jackson argued LeBron James can’t surpass Michael Jordan without matching his six championships

This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 27, 2025, where it first appeared.